the product is the AcO group (ch3-co-oh) replaces the chlorine so you have a benzene ring with a c double bond o, the carbon is then bonded to the o of the AcO group then you have another carbon=O then ch3
acetic anhydride and sodium chloride will form.
Not to any appreciable extent.
Sodium Acetate Can be fond in 2 forms. Either anhydrous or trihydrate. Oxidation reaction with anhydrous form is easier than trihydrate form. First form has reaction similar to that of Oxidation of Acetic Acid. Trihydrate form is a bit more complex and I'm still loking into it
sodium plus chlorine yields sodium chloride
NO REACTION 2NaC2H3O2 + CuSO4 --> Na2SO4 + Cu(C2H3O2)2 since the two products are aqueous, this reaction does not exist
acetic anhydride and sodium chloride will form.
water and salt........or sodium acetate and water.....or NaCH3COO + H2O
Commonly sodium chloride is not dissolved in organic compounds.
oxidation-reductionWhat type of a reaction occurs when a sodium hydroxide solution is mixed with an acetic acid solution?The answer above is wrong. The correct answer is acid-base neutralization
Sodium acetate is obtained from the reaction of the acetic acid with sodium hydroxide, sodium carbonate, etc.
there is no reaction because its salt sodium chloride is what you get after the reaction between sodium and chlorine.
Any reaction between sodium chloride and hydrochloric acid.
A strongly exothermic reaction to produce a salt, sodium chloride.
Not to any appreciable extent.
Sodium Chloride NaCl
Sodium chloride is the product of reaction between sodium hydroxide and hydrogen chloride.
no reaction